Home Uncategorized Canada – Calgary council unanimously votes to condemn Quebec’s ‘regressive’ Bill 21

Canada – Calgary council unanimously votes to condemn Quebec’s ‘regressive’ Bill 21

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Face of Nation : City council will also ask the Canadian Coalition of Municipalities Against Racism to work on a nationwide initiative to oppose the bills harms.

Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi said he feels ashamed because during a recent municipal leaders’ meeting, Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante said she felt alone in her fight against the law — and he wishes he had insisted all the mayors band together to support her.

“This bill is a remarkable encroachment by a provincial government on municipal rights. It actually tells municipalities who they can and cannot hire,” Nenshi said.

“This bill does not treat all faiths the same way … this was a bill that was directly designed to target one group of people, and that’s Muslim women who wear the hijab … baptized Sikhs who wear the turban, and Jewish men, mostly, who wear the kippah.”

Bill 21, which was passed in June, is being challenged in Quebec Superior Court by two civil rights groups. It also gives the government power to ensure institutions comply and can impose sanctions if they do not.

Calgary’s resolution states that wearing religious symbols is a fundamental right, as written in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and protected by the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

“Bill 21 is a step backwards. It is regressive in intent and bigoted in effect,” Chahal said. The World Sikh Organization of Canada said in an emailed statement it thanks Calgary city council for standing with the organization in solidarity.

“The situation created by Quebec’s Bill 21 is a national crisis that threatens the human rights of not just minorities in Quebec but potentially individuals in other provinces as well,” said WSO vice president for Alberta Tejinder Singh.  Montreal, Victoria, B.C., and Kitchener and Brampton, Ont., city councils have passed similar motions.